1

Malin L. Pinsky Department of and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544 [email protected] http://www.princeton.edu/~pinsky

AREAS OF INTEREST Coastal seascape ecology, climate impacts, fisheries, metapopulation ecology, biogeography, molecular ecology, marine conservation, ecosystem services

EDUCATION 2006-2011 Ph.D. in Biology, . Committee: Stephen Palumbi (advisor), Fiorenza Micheli, Steven Gaines, Elizabeth Hadly. 1999-2003 A.B. magna cum laude in Biology and Environmental Studies, Williams College

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE 09/2011- David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellow, Princeton University. Advisors: Simon Levin and Jorge Sarmiento 2004-2006 Conservation Science Associate, Wild Salmon Center, Portland, OR

HONORS AND AWARDS 2012 Best Presentation, 2nd International Symposium: Effects of Climate Change on the World’s Ocean, ICES/PICES, Yeosu, South Korea 2011 Outstanding Student Research in Ecology Award, 2nd Place, Ecological Society of America 2010 Jane Miller Writing Award, Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University 2010 2nd Place Poster, Oceans, Marine Ecosystems, & Society facing Climate Change, European Institute for Marine Studies (IUEM), Brest, France 2010 Friends of Hopkins Scholar, Hopkins Marine Station, Stanford University 2009 Best Student Paper in Organismal/Population Biology, Western Society of Naturalists 2007 Excellence in Teaching Award, Department of Biology, Stanford University 2003 Kenyatta Prize for Public Service, Williams College 2003 Scheffey Award for Environmental Leadership, Williams College 2003 Conant-Harrington Prize in Biology, Williams College 2003 Sigma Xi Scientific Honor Society, Williams College 2

2003 Highest Honors for Senior Thesis in Biology, Williams College 2002, 2003 Phi Beta Kappa, elected Vice President, Williams College 2002-2003 Class of 1960s Scholar in Environmental Studies, Williams College

GRANTS AND FELLOWSHIPS 2012 Princeton Environmental Institute Sustainability Challenge ($4050) 2011-2013 David H. Smith Conservation Research Fellowship ($70,000/yr) 2011-2013 NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology, Intersections of Math and Biology offered but declined 2009-2011 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship ($30,000/yr) 2010 Mel Lane Student Program Grant, Woods Institute for the Environment ($1000) 2010 Center for Ocean Solutions Capitol Hill Oceans Week Scholarship 2009 NCEAS Distributed Graduate Seminar Travel Grant ($1,027) 2009 Mel Lane Student Program Grant, Woods Institute for the Environment ($4000) 2006-2009 National Defense Science & Engineering Graduate Fellowship ($31,000/yr) 2008 Stanford Department of Biology SCORE Grant ($1000) 2008 International Society for Reef Studies/Ocean Conservancy Fellowship ($14,901) 2008 Myers Oceanographic and Marine Biology Trust Grant ($1500) 2007 Student Travel Award, Western Society of Naturalists ($50) 2007 Student Travel Award, Society for the Study of ($750) 2006 Student Travel Award, Western Society of Naturalists ($400) 2001 Center for Environmental Studies Grant, Williams College ($2000)

PUBLICATIONS In preparation

Pinsky, M. L. and S. R. Palumbi. Genetic impacts of overfishing are widespread. For submission to

Arkema, K. K., G. Guannel, M. L. Pinsky, G. Gelfenbaum, A. Guerry, C.-K. Kim, M. Papenfus, S. Polasky, M. Ruckelshaus, P. Ruggiero, J. E. Toft, and S. Wood. Nature’s shield: An ecosystem services model for advancing management of coastal hazards and climate adaptation. For submission to Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Pinsky, M. L., G. Guannel, and K. K. Arkema. Quantifying coastal protection to inform habitat conservation. For submission to Conservation Letters 3

de Bruyn, M., M. L. Pinsky, B. Hall, P. Koch, C. Baroni, and A. R. Hoelzel. Approximate Bayesian Computation applied to ancient DNA: unraveling the demographic history of a now extinct southern elephant seal colony. For submission to Molecular Ecology

In review

Pinsky, M. L. and M. Fogarty. Lagged socio-ecological responses to climate and range shifts in fisheries. For submission to Climate Change Letters

Kim, C.-K., J. E. Toft, M. Papenfus, G. Verutes, A. D. Guerry, M. H. Ruckelshaus, K. K. Arkema, G. Guannel, S. A. Wood, J. R. Bernhardt, H. Tallis, M. L. Plummer; B. S. Halpern, M. L. Pinsky, M. W. Beck, F. Chan, K. Chan, P. S. Levin, S. Polasky. Catching the right wave: evaluating wave energy resources and potential compatibility with existing marine and coastal uses. PLoS One

Peer reviewed

Pinsky, M. L., S. R. Palumbi, S. Andréfouët, S. Purkis (2012) Open and closed seascapes: where does habitat patchiness create populations with low immigration? Ecological Applications DOI 10.1890/11-1240.1

Pinsky, M. L., K. J. Kroeker, C. A. Logan, and D. J. Barshis (in press) Marine conservation and climate change. In Encyclopedia of Biodiversity (S. Levin, editor), Academic Press, San Diego Invited lead author

Guerry, A. D., M. H. Ruckelshaus, K. Arkema, J. R. Bernhardt, G. Guannel, C. K. Kim, M. Marsik, M. Papenfus, M. L. Pinsky, J. E. Toft, G. Verutes, S. A. Wood, M. Beck, F. Chan, K. M. A. Chan, G. Gelfenbaum, B. Gold, B. S. Halpern, B. Labiosa, S. Lester, P. S. Levin, M. McField, M. Plummer, S. Polasky, P. Ruggiero, D. A. Sutherland, H. Tallis (in press). Balancing benefits from nature: Using ecosystem services to inform coastal and marine spatial planning. International Journal of Biodiversity Science, Ecosystem Services & Management O’Connor, M. I., E. R. Selig, M. L. Pinsky, and F. Altermatt (2011) Toward a conceptual synthesis for climate change responses. Global Ecology and Biogeography. DOI 10.1111/j.1466-8238.2011.00713.x

Pinsky, M. L., O. P. Jensen, D. Ricard, and S. R. Palumbi (2011) Unexpected patterns of fisheries collapse in the world’s oceans. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108(20): 8317-8322 Covered by Nature News, CBC, NewScientist, and others. Recommended on Faculty of 1000

C. B. Woodson, J. P. Ryan, O. M. Cheriton, M. A. McManus, J. A. Barth, L. Washburn, S. G. Monismith, K. Carden*, B. Cheng*, L. E. Garske*, T. C. Gouhier*, A. Haupt*, K. Honey*, M. Hubbard*, A. Iles*, P. Lynch*, B. Mahoney*, M. Pinsky*, C. Seaton*, J. Stewart*, M. Robart*, and A. C. True* (2011) Observations of high amplitude internal wave 4

packets propagating alongshore in northern Monterey Bay. Geophysical Research Letters 38, L01605, doi:10.1029/2010GL045453 * Authors are alphabetical

Pinsky, M. L., H. Montes, Jr., and S. R. Palumbi (2010) Using isolation-by-distance and effective density to estimate dispersal scales in anemonefish. Evolution 64(9): 2688-2700

Pinsky, M. L., S. Newsome, B. R. Dickerson, Y. Fang, M. van Tuinen, D. Kennett, R. R. Ream, and E. A. Hadly (2010) Migration, population structure, and resilience to disturbance: using the past to predict the future. Molecular Ecology 19: 2418-2429 Highlighted in Science 330: 582 “Going back to the future to understand climate change”

Jackson, J. A., M. L. Pinsky, C. S. Baker (2009) Erratum: How many whales were there after whaling? Inference from contemporary mtDNA diversity (vol. 17, pg. 236, 2008). Molecular Ecology 18(19): 4134-4135

Pinsky, M. L., D. Springmeyer, M. Goslin, and X. Augerot (2009) Range-wide prioritization of catchments for Pacific salmon conservation. Conservation Biology 23(3): 680-691

Used in testimony before the United States Senate, Subcommittee on Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries, and Coast Guard, April 15, 2010.

Springmeyer, D., M. Pinsky, N. Portley, J. Bonkowski, and P. Rand (2007) Prioritization of Sakhalin watersheds for salmonid conservation. Transactions of the Sakhalin Research Institute of Fisheries and Oceanography 9: 264-293 (in Russian)

Zwirn, M., M. Pinsky, and G. Rahr (2005) Angling ecotourism: Issues, guidelines and experience from Kamchatka. Journal of Ecotourism 4(1): 16-31

Popular and outreach

Pinsky, M. L. and H. Montes, Jr. (2010) Estimating dispersal in marine fish to improve resilience to climate change. Integrated Marine Biogeochemistry and Ecosystem Research (IMBER) Update 16

Varney, A., P. Christie, G. Labrado, L. E. Osorio, and M. Pinsky (2010) The sum is greater than its parts: designing and planning a network of marine protected areas. Coastal Conservation and Education Foundation (Cebu, Philippines) and School of Marine Affairs, University of Washington (Seattle, WA)

Pinsky, M. L. and G. E. Wannier (2010) Managing marine ecosystems for resilience to climate change. Stanford Journal of Law, Science, and Policy 2: i-iv

Pinsky, M. L. (2008). Ecology 101 for Lawyers. Legal Standards for Marine Ecosystem- based Management Workshop, SeaWeb.

Smith, D. and M. Pinsky (2005) International salmon conservation: Alaska, Russia, and beyond. Oncorhynchus 26(2): 1,7 5

Pinsky, M. (2005) Salmon and river basin conservation in the Russian Far East. Russian Conservation News 38: 10-14

Pinsky, M. and K. Hunter-Thomson (2004) Agriculture vs. aquaculture in Chile. Tidepool.org May 20, 2004

Pinsky, M. (2003) Needham’s Logic Skewed. Williams Record. April 29, 2003.

Pinsky, M. (2003) An energy-efficient Baxter. Williams Record. January 28, 2003.

TALKS AND SEMINARS Invited

2012 Are shifts in marine species' ranges predictable? Insights from both coasts of North America. American Institute of Fisheries Research Biologists Annual Meeting. New Bedford, MA. 2012 Speed traps and speeding tickets: can marine species keep up with rapid climate velocities? Keynote speaker for Oceans of Change: ICES/PICES Conference for Early Career Scientists. Mallorca, Spain. 2011 Towards a science of seascape conservation: understanding dispersal, fishing, and a changing climate. Harvest Fisheries Seminar, Bedford Inst. of Oceanography, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia 2011 Towards a science of seascape conservation: understanding dispersal, fishing, and a changing climate. Dept. of Biology Seminar, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia. 2011 New insights into the causes and consequences of fisheries collapse. University of Maine, Machias, ME 2011 New insights into the causes and consequences of fisheries collapse. Rutgers Ecology and Evolution Graduate Program Seminar Series, New Brunswick, NJ 2011 Unexpected patterns of fisheries collapse in the world’s oceans. American Fisheries Society Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA 2011 Open and closed seascapes: where does habitat patchiness create populations with low immigration? International Marine Conservation Congress II, Victoria, BC 2010 Why abundant and widespread marine species are not more resilient to collapse: clues from population genetics and global fisheries. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory Seminar, Princeton, NJ 6

2009 Finding Nemo in the Philippines. Kelp Klimbers and Sea Otters Dive Club, Monterey, CA

2008 The power of many: designing networks of marine sanctuaries. Marine Protected Area Network Planning Workshop, Coastal Conservation and Education Foundation, Cebu, Philippines

2008 Conservation for resilience: global and local perspectives with salmon. Riversymposium, Brisbane, Australia

Contributed

2012 How predictable are species distribution shifts? Testing ecological hypotheses against four decades of observations. 2nd International Symposium: Effects of the Climate Change on the World’s Oceans. ICES/PICES. Yeosu, South Korea. Best oral presentation

2011 Unexpected patterns of fisheries collapse in the world’s oceans. Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, Austin, TX 2011 Genetic impacts of overfishing are widespread. Society for the Study of Evolution Annual Meeting, Norman, OK Covered by NewScientist, 15 July 2011, “Overfishing eats away at genetic diversity of fish,” by Bob Holmes

2010 Beware of assumptions: global meta-analysis reveals that fisheries collapses are not more common among large, top predators. Western Society of Naturalists Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA 2010 Can habitat patchiness explain whether marine populations are open or closed? Lessons from metapopulation theory. Ecological Society of America Annual Meeting, Pittsburgh, PA 2010 Do fishery collapses reduce genetic diversity? Society for the Study of Evolution Annual Meeting, Portland, OR 2009 Genetic scales of larval dispersal in fish: are they compatible with self-recruitment? Western Society of Naturalists Annual Meeting, Monterey, CA 2009 To go or not to go: scales of self-recruitment in Clark’s anemonefish (Amphiprion clarkii). Society for the Study of Evolution Annual Meeting, Moscow, ID 2007 Separating the effects of migration and colonization: ancient DNA in the northern fur seal, Callorhinus ursinus. Western Society of Naturalists Annual Meeting, Ventura, CA 2007 Temporal change in population structure: investigations in the northern fur seal, Callorhinus ursinus. Society for the Study of Evolution Annual Meeting, Christchurch, New Zealand 2006 Freshwater integrity and land use at large scales: a case study with Pacific salmon. Western Society of Naturalists Annual Meeting, Redmond, WA 7

TEACHING Guest Lecturer 2012 Biodiversity Conservation: Scientific and Policy Issues, Princeton University 2010 Molecular Ecology, Stanford University 2009, 2011 Biomechanics, Ecological Physiology & Genetics of Intertidal Communities, Stanford University

Teaching Assistant 2008 The California Coast: Science, Law, and Policy, Stanford University 2007 Molecular Evolution, Stanford University 2006 Genetics, Biochemistry, and Molecular Biology, Stanford University 2002 Ecology, Williams College 2001, 2002 Introduction to Environmental Science, Williams College

Instructor 2005, 2006 Natural History, Leadership, and Wilderness Travel, National Outdoor Leadership Schools (NOLS)

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE 2011-2012 National Climate Assessment, Ecosystem Services Technical Input Team 2011 Integrative Leadership Task Force, Society for Conservation Biology 2011 Co-Organizer, Oceans Colloquium 2011, Stanford University 2007-2011 Chair, Student Collaborations for Ocean Research and Education 2009-2011 Website Director, Hopkins Marine Station Graduate Student Organization, Stanford University 2010 Co-Organizer, Oceans Colloquium 2010, Stanford University 2009-2010 Invited Participant, Natural Capital Project Marine Initiative Working Group 2008-2010 Co-founder & Senior Articles Editor, Stanford Journal of Law, Science, and Policy 2009 Invited Participant, National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) Working Group: Finding Common Ground in Marine Conservation and Management, Distributed Graduate Seminar, Santa Barbara, CA 2009 Co-Organizer, Climate Change and Marine Systems: Managing for Resiliency, Stanford University Keynote Address by United States Senator Sheldon Whitehouse 8

2008-2009 Student Committee of the Marine Section, Society for Conservation Biology 2008 Invited Participant, Legal Standards for Marine Ecosystem-based Management: California and Beyond, Communications Partnership for Science and the Sea (COMPASS) 2007 Workshop Organizer, The Role of Marine Science in Public Policy, Stanford University 2007 Student Representative, Ph.D. Admissions Committee, Stanford University 2002 Chair, Campus Environmental Advisory Committee, Williams College 2002 President, Outing Club, Williams College Peer Reviewer Science, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Ecology Letters, Molecular Ecology, Evolution, Heredity, Conservation Biology, Biological Conservation, Journal of Biogeography, Journal of Marine Biology, PLoS One, International Marine Conservation Congress

9

REFERENCES

Simon A. Levin Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Princeton University Princeton, NJ 08544 [email protected] (609) 258-6880 (office)

Stephen R. Palumbi Hopkins Marine Station Department of Biology Stanford University Pacific Grove, CA 93950 [email protected] (831) 655-6210 (office)

Elizabeth A. Hadly Department of Biology Stanford University Palo Alto, CA 94305 [email protected] (650) 725-2655 (office)